Prostatitis was found in 5-Minute Clinical Consult which helps you diagnose, treat, and follow up on over 900 medical conditions seen in everyday practice.

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Basics

Description

  • Inflammatory or painful condition affecting the prostate gland; variety of etiologies
  • National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) prostatitis classification:
    • Acute infection (NIH class I): Febrile illness with perineal pain, dysuria, and obstructive symptoms
    • Chronic bacterial prostatitis (NIH class II): Recurrent infection with pain and voiding disturbances
    • Chronic abacterial prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (NIH class III):
      • Inflammatory (NIH class IIIa): Significant inflammatory cells in prostatic secretions, postprostatic massage urine, or semen
      • Noninflammatory (NIH class IIIb): Insignificant number of inflammatory cells (prostatosis)
    • Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis (NIH class IV): Incidental finding during prostate biopsy for infertility, cancer workup
  • System(s) affected: Renal/Urologic; Reproductive

Epidemiology


Incidence
  • 2 million cases annually in the US
  • Predominant age: 30–50 years, sexually active; chronic more common in those >50
  • Bacterial prostatitis occurs more frequently in patients with HIV.

Prevalence
2.2–9.7% of male population

Risk Factors

  • Age >50 years
  • Prostate biopsy (especially in patients with prior exposure to quinolones) (1)
  • Prostatic calculi
  • UTI
  • Trauma (e.g., bicycle, horseback riding)
  • Dehydration
  • Sexual abstinence
  • Chronic indwelling catheter
  • Intermittent catheterization
  • HIV infection
  • Urethral stricture
  • Cystoscopy
  • Urethral dilatation
  • Transurethral resection of prostate

General Prevention

Antibiotic prophylaxis and enema prior to prostatic biopsy

Pathophysiology

  • Extension of UTI
  • May occur following manipulation/biopsy of prostate or urethra
  • Ascending infection through urethra

Etiology

  • Infectious: NIH classes I and II:
    • Aerobic gram-negative bacteria (e.g., E. coli, Klebsiella, Proteus, Pseudomonas, N. gonorrhoeae, B. pseudomallei)
    • Miscellaneous: C. trachomatis, Ureaplasma, trichomoniasis
    • Gram-positive bacteria (S. faecalis, S. aureus)
    • Organisms suspected but unproven (S. epidermidis, S. micrococci, non–group D Streptococcus, diphtheroids)
    • Uncommon: M. tuberculosis, parasitic, mycoses (blastomycosis, coccidioidomycosis, cryptococcus, histoplasmosis, paracoccidioidomycosis, candidiasis)
  • Nonbacterial: Cause unknown: Leading theory suggests nonrelaxation (spasm) of the internal urinary sphincter and pelvic floor striated muscles leading to increased prostatic urethral pressure and intraprostatic urinary reflux.

Commonly Associated Conditions

  • Prostatic hypertrophy
  • Cystitis
  • Urethritis
  • Pyelonephritis
  • Sexual dysfunction

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